Broadcom classics
Bo Tong Jing Ji is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ó t ō NGJ ī NGJ í, which means that it originally means extensive and proficient in classical literature. It is used to describe a person who is knowledgeable. Canonized the biography of Ma Rong in the book of the later Han Dynasty
interpretation
Bo: Guangbo: Ji: books. Extensive and proficient in classical literature. A man is learned.
source
In the biography of Ma Rong in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "in the early days, Jing Zhaozhi Xun was a professor of Confucianism in Nanshan, so he should not be recruited. He was famous for guanxi. He learned from his study tour, learned from classics, and learned from his wife. "
Idiom usage
It refers to the knowledge of people
words whose meaning is similar
very learned
Chinese PinYin : bó tōng jīng jí
Broadcom classics
be good both in character and scholarship. jīng míng xíng xiū
shrink back from difficulties. wàng xiù xī xīn
treat able men and scholars with the greatest courtesy. jìng xián ài shì
stand on the edge of a pool and idly long for fish. lín chuān xiàn yú